The War Within - Between Good and Evil by Bheemeswara Challa (e reader for manga .TXT) đ
- Author: Bheemeswara Challa
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eye to the mounting evidence, but also to still ask if global warming is real and if
human actions have any bearing on climate changeâŠ
The right contextual-change will help trigger the right consciousnesschange,
and elevate human consciousness to a higher level and make a deeper
difference. And, in the reverse direction, it will help mitigate and dilute our
ânegativesâ and help confront the vices of greed, vanity, and violence. We must
however remember that we can only mitigate or contain them, not erase them.
These ânegativeâ emotions possibly served a purpose in our earliest days, when we
were fighting simply to survive. Technology has turned things 180 degrees. The
hunted is now the hunter. The upshot is that these destructive traits are now a
more dominant part of our consciousness, as the âpositivesââlike love, kindness,
altruism, and compassionâhave taken a back seat. They are weaker because
their role in our daily context of life, in the ordinary things we do ordinarily,
have become weaker in comparison with the role of our âshadowâ. Whatever
you want to achieve in lifeâto be a global citizen, a moral being, a spiritual
person, or to resolve the climate chaos, or any other pressing problem, and more
fundamentally âto winâ the war withinâall that you need to do is to be righteous
in whatever you do, with a helpful, not harmful, intent towards another âpersonâ.
You need to constantly and consciously try to put someone else on par or above
yourself in any reckoning. Concretely it means putting our sense organsâwhat
we see, touch, hear, smell, and eatâto good use, consciously and deliberately.
Science now says it can help. Researchers have found that a part of our brain
called the right âtemporoparietal junctionâ is activated when we contemplate the
perspective of someone else, even when it differs from our own. All this does not
mean that the world will be crowded with awakened empaths, effective altruists,
and self-sacrificing Good Samaritansâbut it does mean that evil, whether it is a
thing in its own right or absence of something else, banal or brazen, will not be
able to look straight into our eye with a smug sneer; our behavior will be more
benign, and our reflexive reactions less motivated by egotism, mendacity, and
malice. We will be able to deal with the triad of our obsessionsâmorality, money,
and mortalityâbearing in mind the common good of the commonwealth of
mankind. We must get a firm hold on these âthree Msâ, and ensure that the way
we think through and take relevant decisions are for the benefit of the masses,
The End of the Beginning
631
not just for the miniscule minority of the affluent and privileged. We need to
put all three in their proper place. That will decisively change the context and
content of human life, which, in turn, will trigger the consciousness-change.
That will reverse the waning fortunes of the forces of righteousness in the âwar
withinâ. And that is the only way we can avert or abort the looming existential
threats such as climate change, rogue artificial intelligence, nanotechnology, and
suicidal manâmachine-merger.
To avert what David Wallace-Wells102 calls âclimate genocideâ we need
consciousness-change, and for that we need to âwinâ the war within. Much of what
causes us so much distress and dismay, anguish and angst, springs from the fact
that we are obsessed with the wrong wars and are even unaware of the only war
that counts. What is heartening is that we donât need the entire mass of mankind;
a âcritical massâ of global citizens that could trigger a chain reaction would as well
do. We must remember that the right way to âwinâ this war is to see that both
opponents win. It is not conquest; it is ensuring that the âgood wolfâ consistently
keeps an upper hand. If we âwinâ this war this way there will be no more wars like
the ones we now wage. And that means being able to view life not as a zero-sum
game or a game of cat and mouse or a ruthless rat race. Waging and âwinningâ this
war is the antidote to what Philip Zimbardo called the Lucifer Effect, the tipping
point in time when an ordinary, normal person first crosses the boundary between
good and evil to engage in an evil action. It is this warâthe way it is waged, how
we feed the opposing forces, and its outcomeâthat will determine the balance
between dharma and adharma in the world. And if we so conduct ourselves so as
to sustain and strengthen dharma, then we will be doing His will on earth. And
âwinningâ this war could not only let us get off, in Bill McKibbenâs words, the
âlong escalator down to Hellâ, but also abort what is being called the ongoing
âsixth human-caused mass extinction of life on earthâ. âWinningâ this war will, at
last, save us from ruminating in desperation and despair, the twin questions with
which we began the âbeginningâ of this book: Why canât I be good? Why do I do bad?
And then our proclivity to akrasia (lack of self-control or the state of acting against
oneâs better judgment) will yield to cultivating enkrateia (self-control, control over
oneâs own passions and instincts, and self-mastery). When that moment comes, the
human world will come close to what Hindu scriptures so eloquently proclaim:
Vasudaiva kutumbakamâthe whole earth is one family.
633
The Beginning
1.
âI do not understand my own actions because I do not do what I want to. But I do the very thing that I hate. ⊠I can will what is right but I cannot do it. For I do not do the good that I want, but the evil I do not want is what I do.â [Romans 7:15]. âWhy is a person impelled to commit sinful acts, even unwillingly, as if by force, O descendent of Vrishni?â [Chapter 3, verse 36].
2.
âIt is not we who sin, but some other nature that sins within us⊠My sin was all the more incurable because I did not think myself a sinner.â Confessions, Book V, Section 10.
3.
âOn bended knees I beg: when men can get all they want, the four purusharthasâdharma, wealth, pleasure, liberationâby following the path of dharma, why do men indulge in adharma? Source: Immortal Words: an Anthology. 1963. Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan. Bombay, India.
4.
Dharma is a key concept in Hinduism. This Sanskrit word has multiple meanings, and there is no single-word translation for it in Western languages. Dharma signifies oneâs comportment in life in accordance with the Order that makes life and universe possible, and includes duties, rights, laws, conduct, virtues, the âright way of livingâ. In Jainism, dharma is the body of doctrine pertaining to the purification and moral transformation of human beings. In Sikhism, it means the path of righteousness and proper religious practice. (Source: Wikipedia). What is not dharma is âadharmaâ.
5.
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The War WithinâBetween Good and Evil
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